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- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park abstract "Mill Hill Historic Park in Norwalk, Connecticut is a living history museum composed of three buildings: the circa 1740 Governor Thomas Fitch IV \"law office\", the circa 1826 Downtown District Schoolhouse, and the 1835 Norwalk Town Hall; as well as a historic cemetery originally called the Town House Hill Cemetery. The museum is also known as the Mill Hill Historical Complex in some references and the sign at the parking lot reads Norwalk Mill Hill Museum.Mill Hill is located at the eastern end of Wall Street at its intersection with East Avenue in Central Norwalk. In the 18th century the Hill was called Whitney's Hill after the family name of the miller. The burying ground, which is now the third or fourth oldest in Norwalk, was established by the First Congregational church in 1767. There are 11 veterans of the American Revolutionary War buried in the Mill Hill Burying Ground.The original Fitch house was constructed around 1740 on Goodman Hoyt Hill (which was later known as Earl's Hill) on the east side of what is now East Avenue. Governor Thomas Fitch died on July 18, 1774 and the house was left to his survivors including his wife Hannah and son Thomas Fitch, V (of Yankee Doodle fame). The Fitch family house was partially burned in the British raid of Norwalk on July 11 and 12, 1779 since Hannah Fitch, of tory inclinations, had vacated the town of Norwalk to avoid the raid(the British spared only tory properties in their raid). Fitch descendants lived in the house that was reconstructed after the raid until 1945. In 1956 the portion of the Fitch house that survived the Britishraid was saved when Earls' Hill was removed to make room for the construction of the Connecticut Turnpike and moved to Mill Hill. In 1971 the Fitch house remnant was restored to look like an 18th-century law office such as what Governor Fitch would have used.The first schoolhouse in Norwalk constructed for that purpose was built around 1678 located near what had served as the Roger Ludlow School in East Norwalk (that building is now an apartment to the northeast of the East Norwalk Historical Cemetery). Several other school buildings were constructed, including one that was likely burned in the British raid of 1779. The schoolhouse at the Mill Hill site was constructed around 1826 near a former southern intersection of Willow Street and East Avenue. The school became known as the Down Town district schoolhouse since \"Down Town District\" was the name used for what is now called East Norwalk until about 1883 or 1893. The building was used as a school until 1876. Over the subsequent years it was moved several times as neighboring property boundaries were altered. When Interstate 95 was built through East Norwalk the schoolhouse was moved to Mill Hill.At the founding of the Town of Norwalk in 1651 plans were made to construct a meeting house which was done by 1659. That original meeting house also served as the Congregational church. By about 1726 the town's Congregationalists requested that civic meetings be held outside of the church. Civic leaders at first complied with the request by holding meetings in various private homes and then eventually in the Up Town District School (near St. Paul's on the Green, but since relocated). By 1736 the first \"Town House\" for Norwalk was constructed at the site of where the Trolley Barn is located at Wall Street and Knight Street. The next Town House was built on the Mill Hill site but that building was burned in the 1779 British raid. In the aftermath of the burning Colonel Thomas Fitch V and other community members were appointed to a committee to plan the reconstruction of the Norwalk Town House, but the task was not completed until 1794. The 1794 Town House was not kept in good repair and by 1834 was such an embarrassment that it was torn down by vandals. The present Town House at Mill Hill was built in 1835 by Captain Lewis Raymond, who had brought brick to Norwalk as ship ballast. It was possibly the third or fourth building in town constructed of brick. This Town House served the Town of Norwalk until the city-town consolidation that took effect June 30, 1913. Town business then moved to South Norwalk’s City Hall (which eventually became a museum too). The Norwalk Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution leased the Mill Hill Town House building beginning in 1924 and added a kitchen and bathroom at the rear of the building along with a basement. Today the Town House continues to be used for displays of historic memorabilia, meetings, social occasions, and educational programs including visits by schoolchildren.The Mill Hill Historic Park at 2 Wall Street is now maintained by the Norwalk Historical Society and the Norwalk-Village Green Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution.".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park thumbnail Fitch_law_office.jpg?width=300.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageExternalLink MillHill.html.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageID "16658366".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageLength "8947".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageOutDegree "43".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageRevisionID "668525975".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink American_Revolutionary_War.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Category:Buildings_and_structures_in_Norwalk,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cemeteries_in_Fairfield_County,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Category:Culture_of_Norwalk,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Category:Historical_society_museums_in_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_museums_in_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Norwalk,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Category:Houses_in_Fairfield_County,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Category:Museums_in_Fairfield_County,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Category:Open-air_museums_in_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Category:Visitor_attractions_in_Norwalk,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Cemetery.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Central_Norwalk.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Congregational_church.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Connecticut_Turnpike.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Daughters_of_the_American_Revolution.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink East_Norwalk_Historical_Cemetery.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Edwin_Lockwood.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Eliphalet_Lockwood_(deacon).
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Norwalk,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Interstate_95_in_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink John_Betts,_Jr..
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Meeting_house.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Norwalk,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Open-air_museum.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Pine_Island_Cemetery.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Seat_of_local_government.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Taylor_Sherman.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Thaddeus_Betts_(physician).
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Fitch,_V.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Fitch_(governor).
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Tory.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Tryons_raid.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink William_Tecumseh_Sherman.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLink Yankee_Doodle.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mill Hill Burying Ground".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mill Hill Historic Park".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mill Hill".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageWikiLinkText "The Mill Hill Historic Park and Museum".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park caption "Fitch law office building ca. 1740".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park country "United States".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park established "1767".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park imagesize "250".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park location "Norwalk, Connecticut".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park name "Mill Hill Burying Ground".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park type "historic".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Find_a_Grave_cemetery.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Flag.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Flagicon_image.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_cemetery.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park subject Category:Buildings_and_structures_in_Norwalk,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park subject Category:Cemeteries_in_Fairfield_County,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park subject Category:Culture_of_Norwalk,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park subject Category:Historical_society_museums_in_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park subject Category:History_museums_in_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park subject Category:History_of_Norwalk,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park subject Category:Houses_in_Fairfield_County,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park subject Category:Museums_in_Fairfield_County,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park subject Category:Open-air_museums_in_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park subject Category:Visitor_attractions_in_Norwalk,_Connecticut.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park hypernym Museum.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park point "41.1175 -73.4095".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park type Museum.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park type Settlement.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park type Attraction.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park type History.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park type SpatialThing.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park type Concept.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park comment "Mill Hill Historic Park in Norwalk, Connecticut is a living history museum composed of three buildings: the circa 1740 Governor Thomas Fitch IV \"law office\", the circa 1826 Downtown District Schoolhouse, and the 1835 Norwalk Town Hall; as well as a historic cemetery originally called the Town House Hill Cemetery.".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park label "Mill Hill Historic Park".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park sameAs Q6858332.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park sameAs m.03yk7yk.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park sameAs Q6858332.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park lat "41.1175".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park long "-73.4095".
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park wasDerivedFrom Mill_Hill_Historic_Park?oldid=668525975.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park depiction Fitch_law_office.jpg.
- Mill_Hill_Historic_Park isPrimaryTopicOf Mill_Hill_Historic_Park.